The Philippine Star

China vlogger who ate great white shark under probe

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BEIJING (AFP) – A Chinese influencer is under police investigat­ion after a clip of her roasting and eating a great white shark went viral.

Footage of the vlogger, popularly known by her online pseudonym Tizi, showed her feasting on the predatory fish, which police in the central city of Nanchong confirmed Sunday was a great white.

“It may look vicious, but its meat is truly very tender,” Tizi said while tearing off large chunks of the animal’s barbecued meat, in a video posted in mid-July.

In the video, since deleted, she is seen unwrapping a two-meter-long fish and lying down next to it to show that it is taller than her.

The shark is then sliced in half, marinated and barbecued, while the head is cooked in a spicy broth.

Great white sharks are listed as a vulnerable species by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature – just one step before being classed as endangered.

Population­s of sharks – some of the oceans’ most important apex predators – have been battered over the last few decades, the main culprits being finning and industrial longline fishing.

In China, they are listed as protected. Illegal possession can lead to a five-to-10-year prison term.

“It is flabbergas­ting that an Internet celebrity can eat a protected animal in front of millions in broad daylight!” wrote one commentato­r in response to the story.

“These uncultured attentionm­ongers will stoop very low to attract eyeballs!” another said.

It is unclear whether Tizi, who has almost eight million followers, will be punished.

She told local media that she acquired the shark through “legal channels,” but the local agricultur­e bureau said Monday her claim was “inconsiste­nt with the facts” and that police were investigat­ing.

Dried baby shark flesh is used as a cat food in China and can be bought in many online stores.

Chinese state media has long waged war on viral binge-eating videos, known by the Korean slang “mukbang,” while livestream­ing platforms have for years promised to shut down accounts promoting excess eating and food wastage.

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